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Why Muslims
Follow Madhhabs
"Who needs the Imams of
Sacred Law when we have the Qur’an and hadith? Why can’t we take our
Islam from the word of Allah and His Messenger?" Nuh Ha Mim Keller
explains the necessity to respect and value scholars and the schools of Islamic
law.
The work of the mujtahid Imams of
Sacred Law, those who deduce shari‘a rulings from Qur’an and hadith,
has been the object of my research for some years now, during which I have
sometimes heard the question: "Who needs the Imams of Sacred Law when we
have the Qur’an and hadith? Why can’t we take our Islam from the
word of Allah and His Messenger (Allah bless him and give him peace), which are
divinely protected from error, instead of taking it from the madhhabs or
"schools of jurisprudence" of the mujtahid Imams such as Abu Hanifa,
Malik, Shafi‘i, and Ahmad, which are not?"
It cannot be hidden from any of
you how urgent this issue is, or that many of the disagreements we see and hear
in our mosques these days are due to lack of knowledge of fiqh or "Islamic
jurisprudence" and its relation to Islam as a whole. Now, perhaps more than
ever before, it is time for us to get back to basics and ask ourselves how we
understand and carry out the commands of Allah.
We will first discuss the
knowledge of Islam that all of us possess, and then show where fiqh enters into
it. We will look at the qualifications mentioned in the Qur’an and sunna
for those who do fiqh, the mujtahid scholars. We will focus first on the extent
of the mujtahid scholar’s knowledge—how many hadiths he has to know,
and so on—and then we will look at the depth of his knowledge, through
actual examples of dalils or "legal proofs" that demonstrate how
scholars join between different and even contradictory hadiths to produce a
unified and consistent legal ruling.
We will close by discussing the
mujtahid’s relation to the science of hadith authentication, and the
conditions by which a scholar knows that a given hadith is sahih or
"rigorously authenticated," so that he can accept and follow it.
Qur’an and Hadith. The
knowledge that you and I take from the Qur’an and the hadith is of several
types: the first and most important concerns our faith, and is the knowledge of
Allah and His attributes, and the other basic tenets of Islamic belief such as
the messengerhood of the Prophet (Allah bless him and give him peace), the Last
Day, and so on. Every Muslim can and must acquire this knowledge from the Book
of Allah and the sunna.
This is also the case with a
second type of general knowledge, which does not concern faith, however, but
rather works: the general laws of Islam to do good, to avoid evil, to perform
the prayer, pay zakat, fast Ramadan, to cooperate with others in good works, and
so forth. Anyone can learn and understand these general rules, which summarize
the sirat al-mustaqim or "straight path" of our religion.
Fiqh. A third type of knowledge is
of the specific details of Islamic practice. Whereas anyone can understand the
first two types of knowledge from the Qur’an and hadith, the understanding
of this third type has a special name, fiqh, meaning literally
"understanding." And people differ in their capacity to do it.
I had a visitor one day in Jordan,
for example, who, when we talked about why he hadn’t yet gone on hajj,
mentioned the hadith of Anas ibn Malik that
the Messenger of Allah (Allah
bless him and give him peace) said, "Whoever prays the dawn prayer (fajr)
in a group and then sits and does dhikr until the sun rises, then prays two rak‘as,
shall have the like of the reward of a hajj and an ‘umra." Anas said,
"The Prophet (Allah bless him and give him peace) said: ‘Completely,
completely, completely’" (Tirmidhi, 2.481).
My visitor had done just that this
very morning, and he now believed that he had fulfilled his obligation to
perform the hajj, and had no need to go to Mecca. The hadith was well
authenticated (hasan). I distinguished for my visitor between having the reward
of something, and lifting the obligation of Islam by actually doing it, and he
saw my point.
But there is a larger lesson here,
that while the Qur’an and the sunna are ma‘sum or "divinely
protected from error," the understanding of them is not. And someone who
derives rulings from the Qur’an and hadith without training in ijtihad or
"deduction from primary texts" as my visitor did, will be responsible
for it on the Day of Judgment, just as an amateur doctor who had never been to
medical school would be responsible if he performed an operation and somebody
died under his knife.
Why? Because Allah has explained
in the Qur’an that fiqh, the detailed understanding of the divine command,
requires specially trained members of the Muslim community to learn and teach
it. Allah says in surat al-Tawba:
"Not all of the believers
should go to fight. Of every section of them, why does not one part alone go
forth, that the rest may gain understanding of the religion, and to admonish
their people when they return, that perhaps they may take warning" (Qur’an
9:122)
—where the expression li
yatafaqqahu fi al-din, "to gain understanding of the religion," is
derived from precisely the same root (f-q-h) as the word fiqh or
"jurisprudence," and is what Western students of Arabic would call a
"fifth-form verb" (tafa‘‘ala), which indicates that the
meaning contained in the root, understanding, is accomplished through careful,
sustained effort.
This Qur’anic verse
establishes that there should be a category of people who have learned the
religion so as to be qualified in turn to teach it. And Allah has commanded
those who do not know a ruling in Sacred Law to ask those who do, by saying in
surat al-Nahl,
"Ask those who recall if you
know not" (Qur’an 16:43),
in which the words "those who
recall," ahl al-dhikri, indicate those with knowledge of the Qur’an
and sunna, at their forefront the mujtahid Imams of this Umma. Why? Because,
first of all, the Qur’an and hadith are in Arabic, and as a translator, I
can assure you that it is not just any Arabic.
To understand the Qur’an and
sunna, the mujtahid must have complete knowledge of the Arabic language in the
same capacity as the early Arabs themselves had before the language came to be
used by non-native speakers. This qualification, which almost no one in our time
has, is not the main subject of my essay, but even if we did have it, what if
you or I, though not trained specialists, wanted to deduce details of Islamic
practice directly from the sources? After all, the Prophet (Allah bless him and
give him peace) has said, in the hadith of Bukhari and Muslim: "When a
judge gives judgement and strives to know a ruling (ijtahada) and is correct, he
has two rewards. If he gives judgement and strives to know a ruling, but is
wrong, he has one reward" (Bukhari, 9.133).
The answer is that the term
ijtihad or "striving to know a ruling" in this hadith does not mean
just any person’s efforts to understand and operationalize an Islamic
ruling, but rather the person with sound knowledge of everything the Prophet
(Allah bless him and give him peace) taught that relates to the question.
Whoever makes ijtihad without this qualification is a criminal. The proof of
this is the hadith that the Companion Jabir ibn ‘Abdullah said:
We went on a journey, and a stone
struck one of us and opened a gash in his head. When he later had a wet-dream in
his sleep, he then asked his companions, "Do you find any dispensation for
me to perform dry ablution (tayammum)?" [Meaning instead of a full
purificatory bath (ghusl).] They told him, "We don’t find any
dispensation for you if you can use water."
So he performed the purificatory
bath and his wound opened and he died. When we came to the Prophet (Allah bless
him and give him peace), he was told of this and he said: "They have killed
him, may Allah kill them. Why did they not ask?—for they didn’t
know. The only cure for someone who does not know what to say is to ask"
(Abu Dawud, 1.93).
This hadith, which was related by
Abu Dawud, is well authenticated (hasan), and every Muslim who has any taqwa
should reflect on it carefully, for the Prophet (Allah bless him and give him
peace) indicated in it—in the strongest language possible—that to
judge on a rule of Islam on the basis of insufficient knowledge is a crime. And
like it is the well authenticated hadith "Whoever is given a legal opinion
(fatwa) without knowledge, his sin is but upon the person who gave him the
opinion" (Abu Dawud, 3.321).
The Prophet (Allah bless him and
give him peace) also said:
Judges are three: two of them in
hell, and one in paradise. A man who knows the truth and judges accordingly, he
shall go to paradise. A man who judges for people while ignorant, he shall go to
hell. And a man who knows the truth but rules unjustly, he shall go to hell (Sharh
al-sunna, 10.94).
This hadith, which was related by
Abu Dawud, Tirmidhi, Ibn Majah, and others, is rigorously authenticated (sahih),
and any Muslim who would like to avoid the hellfire should soberly consider the
fate of whoever, in the words of the Prophet (Allah bless him and give him
peace), "judges for people while ignorant."
Yet we all have our Yusuf ‘Ali
Qur’ans, and our Sahih al-Bukhari translations. Aren’t these
adequate scholarly resources?
These are valuable books, and do
convey perhaps the largest and most important part of our din: the basic Islamic
beliefs, and general laws of the religion. Our discussion here is not about
these broad principles, but rather about understanding specific details of
Islamic practice, which is called precisely fiqh. For this, I think any honest
investigator who studies the issues will agree that the English translations are
not enough. They are not enough because understanding the total Qur’an and
hadith textual corpus, which comprises what we call the din, requires two
dimensions in a scholar: a dimension of breadth, the substantive knowledge of
all the texts; and a dimension of depth, the methodological tools needed to join
between all the Qur’anic verses and hadiths, even those that ostensibly
contradict one another.
Knowledge of Primary Texts. As for
the breadth of a mujtahid’s knowledge, it is recorded that Imam Ahmad ibn
Hanbal’s student Muhammad ibn ‘Ubaydullah ibn al-Munadi
heard a man ask him [Imam Ahmad]:
"When a man has memorized 100,000 hadiths, is he a scholar of Sacred Law, a
faqih?" And he said, "No." The man asked, "200,000
then?" And he said, "No." The man asked, "Then
300,000?" And he said, "No." The man asked, "400,000?"
And Ahmad gestured with his hand to signify "about that many" (Ibn al-Qayyim:
I‘lam al-muwaqqi‘in, 4.205).
In truth, by the term
"hadith" here Imam Ahmad meant the hadiths of the Prophet (Allah bless
him and give him peace) in all their various chains of transmission, counting
each chain of transmission as a separate hadith, and perhaps also counting the
statements of the Sahaba. But the larger point here is that even if we eliminate
the different chains, and speak only about the hadiths from the Prophet (Allah
bless him and give him peace) that are plainly acceptable as evidence, whether
sahih, "rigorously authenticated" or hasan "well
authenticated" (which for purposes of ijtihad, may be assimilated to the
sahih), we are still speaking of well over 10,000 hadiths, and they are not
contained in Bukhari alone, or in Bukhari and Muslim alone, nor yet in any six
books, or even in any nine. Yet whoever wants to give a fatwa or "formal
legal opinion" and judge for people that something is lawful or unlawful,
obligatory or sunna, must know all the primary texts that relate to it. For the
perhaps 10,000 hadiths that are sahih are, for the mujtahid, as one single
hadith, and he must first know them in order to join between them to explain the
unified command of Allah.
I say "join between"
because most of you must be aware that some sahih hadiths seem to controvert
other equally sahih hadiths. What does a mujtahid do in such an instance?
Ijtihad. Let’s look at some
examples. Most of us know the hadiths about fasting on the Day of ‘Arafa
for the non-pilgrim, that "it expiates [the sins of] the year before and
the year after" (Muslim, 2.819). But another rigorously authenticated
hadith prohibits fasting on Friday alone (Bukhari, 3.54), and a well
authenticated hadith prohibits fasting on Saturday alone (Tirmidhi, 3.120), of
which Tirmidhi explains, "The meaning of the ‘offensiveness’ in
this is when a man singles out Saturday to fast on, since the Jews venerate
Saturdays" (ibid.). Some scholars hold Sundays offensive to fast on for the
same reason, that they are venerated by non-Muslims. (Other hadiths permit
fasting one of these days together with the day before or the day after it,
perhaps because no religion venerates two of the days in a row.) The question
arises: What does one do when ‘Arafa falls on a Friday, a Saturday, or a
Sunday? The general demand for fasting on the Day of ‘Arafa might well be
qualified by the specific prohibition of fasting on just one of these days. But
a mujtahid aware of the whole hadith corpus would certainly know a third hadith
related by Muslim that is even more specific, and says: "Do not single out
Friday from among other days to fast on, unless it coincides with a fast one of
you performs" (Muslim, 2.801).
The latter hadith establishes for
the mujtahid the general principle that the ruling for fasting on a day normally
prohibited to fast on changes when it "coincides with a fast one of you
performs"—and so there is no problem with fasting whether the Day of
Arafa falls on a Friday, Saturday, or Sunday.
Here as elsewhere, whoever wants
to understand the ruling of doing something in Islam must know all the texts
connected with it. Because as ordinary Muslims, you and I are not only
responsible for obeying the Qur’anic verses and hadiths we are familiar
with. We are responsible for obeying all of them, the whole shari‘a. And
if we are not personally qualified to join between all of its texts—and we
have heard Ahmad ibn Hanbal discuss how much knowledge this takes—we must
follow someone who can, which is why Allah tells us, "Ask those who recall
if you know not."
The size and nature of this
knowledge necessitate that the non-specialist use adab or "proper
respect" towards the scholars of fiqh when he finds a hadith, whether in
Bukhari or elsewhere, that ostensibly contradicts the schools of fiqh. A
non-scholar, for example, reading through Sahih al-Bukhari will find the hadith
that the Prophet (Allah bless him and give him peace) bared a thigh on the ride
back from Khaybar (Bukhari, 1.103–4). And he might imagine that the four
madhhabs or "legal schools"—Hanafi, Maliki, Shafi‘i, and
Hanbali—were mistaken in their judgment that the thigh is ‘awra or
"nakedness that must be covered."
But in fact there are a number of
other hadiths, all of them well authenticated (hasan) or rigorously
authenticated (sahih) that prove that the Prophet (Allah bless him and give him
peace) explicitly commanded various Sahaba to cover the thigh because it was
nakedness. Hakim reports that the Prophet (Allah bless him and give him peace)
saw Jarhad in the mosque wearing a mantle, and his thigh became uncovered, so
the Prophet told him, "The thigh is part of one’s nakedness"
(al-Mustadrak), of which Hakim said, "This is a hadith whose chain of
transmission is rigorously authenticated (sahih)," which Imam Dhahabi
confirmed (ibid.). Imam al-Baghawi records the sahih hadith that "the
Prophet (Allah bless him and give him peace) passed by Ma‘mar, whose two
thighs were exposed, and told him, ‘O Ma‘mar, cover your two thighs,
for the two thighs are nakedness’" (Sharh al-sunna 9.21). And Ahmad
ibn Hanbal records that the Prophet (Allah bless him and give him peace) said,
"When one of you marries [someone to] his servant or hired man, let him not
look at his nakedness, for what is below his navel to his two knees is
nakedness" (Ahmad, 2.187), a hadith with a well authenticated (hasan) chain
of transmission. The mujtahid Imams of the four schools knew these hadiths, and
joined between them and the Khaybar hadith in Bukhari by the methodological
principle that: "An explicit command in words from the Prophet (Allah bless
him and give him peace) is given precedence over an action of his." Why?
Among other reasons, because
certain laws of the shari‘a applied to the Prophet alone (Allah bless him
and give him peace). Such as the fact that when he went into battle, he was not
permitted to retreat, no matter how outnumbered. Or such as the obligatoriness
for him alone of praying tahajjud or "night vigil prayer" after rising
from sleep before dawn, which is merely sunna for the rest of us. Or such as the
permissibility for him alone of not breaking his fast at night between
fast-days. Or such as the permissibility for him alone of having more than four
wives—the means through which Allah, in His wisdom, preserved for us the
minutest details of the Prophet’s day-to-day sunna (Allah bless him and
give him peace), which a larger number of wives would be far abler to observe
and remember.
Because certain laws of the shari‘a
applied to him alone, the scholars of ijtihad have established the principle
that in many cases, when an act was done by the Prophet personally (Allah bless
him and give him peace), such as bearing the thigh after Khaybar, and when he
gave an explicit command to us to do something else, in this case, to cover the
thigh because it is nakedness, then the command is adopted for us, and the act
is considered to pertain to him alone (Allah bless him and give him peace).
We can see from this example the
kind of scholarship it takes to seriously comprehend the whole body of hadith,
both in breadth of knowledge, and depth of interpretive understanding or fiqh,
and that anyone who would give a fatwa, on the basis of the Khaybar hadith in
Sahih al-Bukhari, that "the scholars are wrong and the hadith is
right" would be guilty of criminal negligence for his ignorance.
When one does not have substantive
knowledge of the Qur’an and hadith corpus, and lacks the fiqh methodology
to comprehensively join between it, the hadiths one has read are not enough. To
take another example, there is a well authenticated (hasan) hadith that
"the Prophet (Allah bless him and give him peace) cursed women who visit
graves" (Tirmidhi, 3.371). But scholars say that the prohibition of women
visiting graves was abrogated (mansukh) by the rigorously authenticated (sahih)
hadith "I had forbidden you to visit graves, but now visit them"
(Muslim, 2.672).
Here, although the expression
"now visit them" (fa zuruha) is an imperative to men (or to a group of
whom at least some are men), the fact that the hadith permits women as well as
men to now visit graves is shown by another hadith related by Muslim in his
Sahih that when ‘A'isha asked the Prophet (Allah bless him and give him
peace) what she should say if she visited graves, he told her, "Say:
‘Peace be upon the believers and Muslims of the folk of these abodes: May
Allah have mercy on those of us who have gone ahead and those who have stayed
behind: Allah willing, we shall certainly be joining you’" (Muslim,
2.671), which plainly entails the permissibility of her visiting graves in order
to say this, for the Prophet (Allah bless him and give him peace) would never
have taught her these words if visiting the graves to say them had been
disobedience. In other words, knowing all these hadiths, together with the
methodological principle of naskh or "abrogation," is essential to
drawing the valid fiqh conclusion that the first hadith in which "the
Prophet (Allah bless him and give him peace) cursed women who visit graves"—was
abrogated by the second hadith, as is attested to by the third.
Or consider the Qur’anic
text in surat al-Ma’ida:
"The food of those who have
been given the Book is lawful for you, and your food is lawful for them"
(Qur’an 5:5).
This is a general ruling
ostensibly pertaining to all their food. Yet this ruling is subject to takhsis,
or "restriction" by more specific rulings that prove that certain
foods of Ahl al-Kitab, "those who have been given the Book," such as
pork, or animals not properly slaughtered, are not lawful for us.
Ignorance of this principle of
takhsis or restriction seems to be especially common among would-be mujtahids of
our times, from whom we often hear the more general ruling in the words
"But the Qur’an says," or "But the hadith says,"
without any mention of the more particular ruling from a different hadith or Qur’anic
versethat restricts it. The reply can only be "Yes, brother, the Qur’an
does say, ‘The food of those who have been given the Book is lawful for
you,’ But what else does it say?" or "Yes, the hadith in Sahih
al-Bukhari says the Prophet (Allah bless him and give him peace) bared his thigh
on the return from Khaybar. But what else do the hadiths say, and more
importantly, are you sure you know it?"
The above examples illustrate only
a few of the methodological rules needed by the mujtahid to understand and
operationalize Islam by joining between all the evidence. Firstly, we saw the
principle of takhsis or "restriction" of general rules by more
specific ones, both in the example of fasting on the Day of ‘Arafa when it
falls on a Friday, Saturday, or Sunday, and the example of the food of Ahl al-Kitab.
Secondly, in the Khaybar hadith in Sahih al-Bukhari about baring the thigh and
the hadiths commanding that the thigh be covered, we saw the principle of how an
explicit prophetic command in words is given precedence over a mere action when
there is a contradiction. Thirdly, we saw the principle of nasikh wa mansukh, of
"an earlier ruling being abrogated by a later one," in the example of
the initial prohibition of women visiting graves, and their subsequently being
permitted to.
These are only three of the ways
that two or more texts of the Qur’an and hadith may enter into and qualify
one another, rules that someone who derives the shari‘a from them must
know. In other words, they are but three tools of a whole methodological
toolbox. We do not have the time tonight to go through all these tools in
detail, although we can mention some in passing, giving first their Arabic
names, such as:
—The ‘amm, a text of
general applicability to many legal rulings, and its opposite:
—The khass, that which is
applicable to only one ruling or type of ruling.
—The mujmal, that which
requires other texts to be fully understood, and its opposite:
—The mubayyan, that which is
plain without other texts.
—The mutlaq, that which is
applicable without restriction, and its opposite:
—The muqayyad, that which
has restrictions given in other texts.
—The nasikh, that which
supersedes previous revealed rulings, and its opposite:
—The mansukh: that which is
superseded.
—The nass: that which
unequivocally decides a particular legal question, and its opposite:
—The dhahir: that which can
bear more than one interpretation.
My point in mentioning what a
mujtahid is, what fiqh is, and the types of texts that embody Allah’s
commands, with the examples that illustrate them, is to answer our original
question: "Why can’t we take our Islamic practice from the word of
Allah and His messenger, which are divinely protected, instead of taking it from
mujtahid Imams, who are not?" The answer, we have seen, is that revelation
cannot be acted upon without understanding, and understanding requires firstly
that one have the breadth of mastery of the whole, and secondly, the knowledge
of how the parts relate to each other. Whoever joins between these two
dimensions of the revelation is taking his Islamic practice from the word of
Allah and His messenger, whether he does so personally, by being a mujtahid
Imam, or whether by a means of another, by following one.
Following Scholars (Taqlid). The
Qur’an clearly distinguishes between these two levels—the
nonspecialists whose way is taqlid or "following the results of scholar
without knowing the detailed evidence"; and those whose task is to know and
evaluate the evidence—by Allah Most High saying in surat al-Nisa’:
"If they had referred it to
the Messenger and to those of authority among them, then those of them whose
task it is to find it out would have known the matter" (Qur’an 4:83)
—where alladhina
yastanbitunahu minhum, "those of them whose task it is to find it
out," refers to those possessing the capacity to infer legal rulings
directly from evidence, which is called in Arabic precisely istinbat, showing,
as Qur’anic exegete al-Razi says, that "Allah has commanded those
morally responsible to refer actual facts to someone who can infer (yastanbitu)
the legal ruling concerning them" (Tafsir al-Fakhr al-Razi, 10.205).
A person who has reached this
level can and indeed must draw his inferences directly from evidence, and may
not merely follow another scholar’s conclusions without examining the
evidence (taqlid), a rule expressed in books of methodological principles of
fiqh as: Laysa li al-‘alim an yuqallida, "The alim [i.e. the mujtahid
at the level of instinbat referred to by the above Qur’anic verse] may not
merely follow another scholar" (al-Juwayni: Sharh al-Waraqat, 75), meaning
it is not legally permissible for one mujtahid to follow another mujtahid unless
he knows and agrees with his evidences.
The mujtahid Imams trained a
number of scholars who were at this level. Imam Shafi‘i had al-Muzani, and
Imam Abu Hanifa had Abu Yusuf and Muhammad ibn al-Hasan al-Shaybani. It was to
such students that Abu Hanifa addressed his words: "It is unlawful for
whoever does not know my evidence to give my position as a fatwa" (al-Hamid:
Luzum ittiba‘ madhahib al-a’imma, 6), and, "It is not lawful
for anyone to give our position as a fatwa until he knows where we have taken it
from" (ibid.).
It is one of the howlers of our
times that these words are sometimes quoted as though they were addressed to
ordinary Muslims. If it were unlawful for the carpenter, the sailor, the
computer programmer, the doctor, to do any act of worship before he had mastered
the entire textual corpus of the Qur’an and thousands of hadiths, together
with all the methodological principles needed to weigh the evidence and
comprehensively join between it, he would either have to give up his profession
or give up his religion. A lifetime of study would hardly be enough for this, a
fact that Abu Hanifa knew better than anyone else, and it was to scholars of
istinbat, the mujtahids, that he addressed his remarks. Whoever quotes these
words to non-scholars to try to suggest that Abu Hanifa meant that it is wrong
for ordinary Muslims to accept the work of scholars, should stop for a moment to
reflect how insane this is, particularly in view of the life work of Abu Hanifa
from beginning to end, which consisted precisely in summarizing the fiqh rulings
of the religion for ordinary people to follow and benefit from.
Imam Shafi‘i was also
addressing this top level of scholars when he said: "When a hadith is sahih,
it is my school (madhhab)"—which has been misunderstood by some to
mean that if one finds a hadith, for example, in Sahih al-Bukhari that is
inconsistent with a position of Shafi‘i's, one should presume that he was
ignorant of it, drop the fiqh, and accept the hadith.
I think the examples we have heard
tonight of joining between several hadiths for a single ruling are too clear to
misunderstand Shafi‘i in this way. Shafi‘i is referring to hadiths
that he was previously unaware of and that mujtahid scholars know him to have
been unaware of when he gave a particular ruling. And this, as Imam Nawawi has
said, "is very difficult," for Shafi‘i was aware of a great
deal. We have heard the opinion of Shafi‘i's student Ahmad ibn Hanbal
about how many hadiths a faqih must know, and he unquestionably considered Shafi‘i
to be such a scholar, for Shafi‘i was his sheikh in fiqh. Ibn Khuzayma,
known as "the Imam of Imams" in hadith memorization, was once asked,
"Do you know of any rigorously authenticated (sahih) hadith that Shafi‘i
did not place in his books?" And he said "No" (Nawawi: al-Majmu‘,
1.10). And Imam Dhahabi has said, "Shafi‘i did not make a single
mistake about a hadith" (Ibn Subki: Tabaqat al-Shafi‘iyya, 9.114). It
is clear from all of this that Imam Shafi‘i's statement "When a
hadith is sahih, it is my position" only makes sense—and could result
in meaningful corrections—if addressed to scholars at a level of hadith
mastery comparable to his own.
Hadith Authentication. The last
point raises another issue that few people are aware of today, and I shall
devote the final part of my speech to it. Just as the mujtahid Imam is not like
us in his command of the Qur’an and hadith evidence and the principles
needed to join between it and infer rulings from it, so too he is not like us in
the way he judges the authenticity of hadiths. If a person who is not a hadith
specialist needs to rate a hadith, he will usually want to know if it appears,
for example, in Sahih al-Bukhari, or Sahih Muslim, or if some hadith scholar has
declared it to be sahih or hasan. A mujtahid does not do this.
Rather, he reaches an independent
judgment as to whether a particular hadith is truly from the Prophet (Allah
bless him and give him peace) through his own knowledge of hadith narrators and
the sciences of hadith, and not from taqlid or "following the opinion of
another hadith scholar."
It is thus not necessarily an
evidence against the positions of a mujtahid that Bukhari, or Muslim, or
whoever, has accepted a hadith that contradicts the mujtahid’s evidence.
Why? Because among hadith scholars, the reliability rating of individual
narrators in hadith chains of transmission are disagreed about and therefore
hadiths are disagreed about in the same manner that particular questions of fiqh
are disagreed about among the scholars of fiqh. Like the schools of fiqh, the
extent of this disagreement is relatively small in relation to the whole, but
one should remember that it does exist.
Because a mujtahid scholar is not
bound to accept another scholar’s ijtihad regarding a particular hadith,
the ijtihad of a hadith specialist of our own time that, for example, a hadith
is weak (da‘if), is not necessarily an evidence against the ijtihad of a
previous mujtahid that the hadith is acceptable. This is particularly true in
the present day, when specialists in hadith are not at the level of their
predecessors in either knowledge of hadith sciences, or memorization of hadiths.
We should also remember what sahih
means. I shall conclude my essay with the five conditions that have to be met
for a hadith to be considered sahih, and we shall see, in sha’ Allah, how
the scholars of hadith have differed about them, a discussion drawn in its
outlines from contemporary Syrian hadith scholar Muhammad ‘Awwama’s
Athar al-hadith al-sharif fi ikhtilaf al-A’imma al-fuqaha [The effect of
hadith on the differences of the Imams of fiqh] (21–23):
(a) The first condition is that a
hadith must go back to the Prophet (Allah bless him and give him peace) by a
continuous chain of narrators. There is a difference of opinion here between
Bukhari and Muslim, in that Bukhari held that for any two adjacent narrators in
a chain of transmission, it must be historically established that the two
actually met, whereas Muslim and others stipulated only that their meeting have
been possible, such as by one having lived in a particular city that the other
is known to have visited at least once in his life. So some hadiths will be
acceptable to Muslim that will not be acceptable to Bukhari and those of the
mujtahid imams who adopt his criterion.
(b) The second condition for a
sahih hadith is that the narrators be morally upright. The scholars have
disagreed about the definition of this, some accepting that it is enough that a
narrator be a Muslim who is not proven to have been unacceptable. Others
stipulate that he be outwardly established as having been morally upright, while
other scholars stipulate that this be established inwardly as well. These
different criteria are naturally reasons why two mujtahids may differ about the
authenticity of a single hadith.
(c) The third condition is that
the narrators must be known to have had accurate memories. The verification of
this is similarly subject to some disagreement between the Imams of hadith,
resulting in differences about reliability ratings of particular narrators, and
therefore of particular hadiths.
(d) The fourth condition for a
sahih hadith is that the text and transmission of the hadith must be free of
shudhudh, or "variance from established standard narrations of it." An
example is when a hadith is related by five different narrators who are
contemporaries of one another, all of whom relate the same hadith from the same
sheikh through his chain of transmission back to the Prophet (Allah bless him
and give him peace). Here, if we find that four of the hadiths have the same
wording but one of them has a variant wording, the hadith with the variant
wording is called shadhdh or "deviant," and it is not accepted,
because the difference is naturally assumed to be the mistake of the one
narrator, since all of the narrators heard the hadith from the same sheikh.
There is a hadith (to take an
example researched by our hadith teacher, sheikh Shu‘ayb al-Arna’ut)
related by Ahmad (4.318), Bayhaqi (2.132), Ibn Khuzayma (1.354), and Ibn Hibban,
with a reliable chain of narrators (thiqat)—except for Kulayb ibn Hisham,
who is a merely "acceptable" (saduq), not "reliable" (thiqa)—that
the Companion Wa’il ibn Hujr al-Hadrami said that when he watched the
Prophet (Allah bless him and give him peace) kneeling in the Tashahhud or "Testification
of Faith" of his prayer, the Prophet
lifted his [index] finger, and I
saw him move it, supplicating with it. I came [some time] after that and saw
people in [winter] over-cloaks, their hands moving under the cloaks (Ibn Hibban,
5.170–71).
Now, all of the versions of the
hadith mentioning that the Prophet (Allah bless him and give him peace) moved
his finger have been related to us by way of Za’ida ibn Qudama al-Thaqafi,
a narrator who is considered reliable, and who transmitted it from the hadith
sheikh ‘Asim ibn Kulayb, who related it from his father Kulayb ibn Shihab,
from Wa’il ibn Hujr al-Hadrami. But we find that this version of
"moving the finger" contradicts versions of the hadith transmitted
from the same sheikh, ‘Asim ibn Kulayb, by no less than ten of ‘Asim’s
other students, all of them reliable, who heard ‘Asim report that the
Prophet (Allah bless him and give him peace) did not move but rather pointed (ashara)
with his index finger (towards the qibla or "direction of prayer").
These companions of ‘Asim
(with their hadiths, which are well authenticated (hasan)) are: Sufyan al-Thawri:
"then he pointed with his index finger, putting the thumb to the middle
finger to make a ring with them" (al-Musannaf 2.68–69); Sufyan ibn
‘Uyayna: "he joined his thumb and middle finger to make a ring, and
pointed with his index finger" (Ahmad, 4.318); Shu‘ba ibn al-Hajjaj:
"he pointed with his index finger, and formed a ring with the middle
one" (Ahmad, 4.319); Qays ibn al-Rabi‘: "then he joined his
thumb and middle finger to make a ring, and pointed with his index finger"
(Tabarani, 22.33–34); ‘Abd al-Wahid ibn Ziyad al-‘Abdi:
"he made a ring with a finger, and pointed with his index finger"
(Ahmad, 4.316); ‘Abdullah ibn Idris al-Awdi: "he had joined his thumb
and middle finger to make a ring, and raised the finger between them to make du‘a
(supplication) in the Testification of Faith" (Ibn Majah, 1.295); Zuhayr
ibn Mu‘awiya: "and I saw him [‘Asim] say, ‘Like this,’—and
Zuhayr pointed with his first index finger, holding two fingers in, and made a
ring with his thumb and second index [middle] finger" (Ahmad, 4.318–19);
Abu al-Ahwas Sallam ibn Sulaym: "he began making du‘a like this—meaning
with his index finger, pointing with it—" (Musnad al-Tayalisi, 137);
Bishr ibn al-Mufaddal: "and I saw him [‘Asim] say, ‘Like this,’—and
Bishr joined his thumb and middle finger to make a ring, and pointed with his
index finger" (Abi Dawud, 1.251); and Khalid ibn Abdullah al-Wasiti:
"then he joined his thumb and middle finger to make a ring, and pointed
with his index finger" (Bayhaqi, 2.131).
All of these narrators are
reliable (thiqat), and all heard ‘Asim ibn Kulayb relate that the Prophet
(Allah bless him and give him peace) "pointed with (ashara bi) his index
finger" during the Testimony of Faith in his prayer. There are many other
narrations of "pointing with the index finger" transmitted through
sheikhs other than ‘Asim, omitted here for brevity—four of them, for
example, in Sahih Muslim, 1.408–9). The point is, for illustrating the
meaning of a shadhdh or "deviant hadith," that the version of moving
the finger was conveyed only by Za’ida ibn Qudama from ‘Asim. Ibn
Khuzayma says: "There is not a single hadith containing yuharrikuha (‘he
moved it’) except this hadith mentioned by Za’ida" (Ibn
Khuzayma, 1.354).
So we know that the Prophet (Allah
bless him and give him peace) used to point with his index finger, and that the
version of "moving his finger" is shadhdh or "deviant," and
represents a slip of the narrator, for the word ishara in the majority’s
version means only "to point or gesture at," or "to indicate with
the hand," and has no recorded lexical sense of wiggling or shaking the
finger (Lisan al-‘Arab, 4.437 and al-Qamus al-muhit (540). This
interpretation is explicitly borne out by well authenticated hadiths related
from the Companion Abdullah ibn al-Zubayr that "the Prophet (Allah bless
him and give him peace) used to point with his index finger when making
supplication [in the Testification of Faith], and did not move it" (Abi
Dawud, 1.260) and that he "used to point with his index finger when making
supplication, without moving it" (Bayhaqi, 2.131–32).
Finally, we may note that Imam
Bayhaqi has joined between the Za’ida ibn Qudama hadith and the many
hadiths that apparently contradict it by suggesting that moving the finger in
the Za’ida hadith may mean simply lifting it (rafa‘a), a wording
explicitly mentioned in one version recorded by Muslim that the Prophet (Allah
bless him and give him peace) "raised the right finger that is next to the
thumb, and supplicated with it" (Muslim, 1.408). So according to Bayhaqi,
the contradiction is only apparent, and raising the finger is the
"movement" that Wa’il saw from the Prophet (Allah bless him and
give him peace) and the people’s hands under their cloaks, according to Za’ida’s
version, which remains, however, shadhdh or "deviant" from a hadith
point of view, unless understood in this limitary sense.
(e) The fifth and final condition
for a sahih hadith is that both the text and chain of transmission must be
without ‘illa or "hidden flaw" that alerts experts to expect
inauthenticity in it. We will dwell for a moment on this point not only because
it helps illustrate the processes of ijtihad, but because in-depth expertise in
this condition was not common even among top hadith Imams. The greatest name in
the field was ‘Ali al-Madini, one of the sheikhs of Bukhari, though his
major work about it is now unfortunately lost. Daraqutni is perhaps the most
famous specialist in the field whose works exist. In the words of Ibn al-Salah,
a hafiz or "hadith master" (someone with at least 100,000 hadiths by
memory), the knowledge of the ‘illa or "hidden flaw" is:
among the greatest of the sciences
of hadith, the most exacting, and highest: only scholars of great memorization,
hadith expertise, and penetrating understanding have a thorough knowledge of it.
It refers to obscure, hidden flaws that vitiate hadiths, "flawed"
meaning that a defect is discovered that negates the authenticity of a hadith
that is outwardly "rigorously authenticated" (sahih). It affects
hadiths with reliable chains of narrators that outwardly appear to fulfill all
the conditions of a sahih hadith (‘Ulum al-hadith).
It may surprise some people to
learn that one example often cited in hadith textbooks of such a hidden flaw (‘illa)
is from Sahih Muslim, all of whose hadiths are rigorously authenticated (sahih),
as Ibn al-Salah has said, "except for a very small number of words, which
hadith masters of textual evaluation (naqd) such as Daraqutni and others have
critiqued, and which are known to scholars of this level" (‘Ulum
al-hadith). The hadith of the present example was related by Muslim from the
Companion Anas ibn Malik in several versions, which might convince those unaware
of its flaw to believe that someone at prayer should omit the Basmala or "Bismi
Llahi r-Rahmani r-Rahim" at the beginning of the Fatiha. According to the
hadith, Anas ibn Malik (Allah be well pleased with him) said,
I prayed with the Messenger of
Allah (Allah bless him and give him peace), Abu Bakr, ‘Umar, and ‘Uthman,
and they opened with "al-Hamdu li Llahi Rabbi l-‘Alamin,"not
mentioning "Bismi Llahi r-Rahmani r-Rahim" at the first of the recital
or the last of it [and in another version, "I didn’t hear any of them
recite ‘Bismi Llahi r-Rahmani r-Rahim’"] (Muslim, 1.299).
Scholars say the hadith’s
flaw lies in the negation of the Basmala at the end, which is not the words of
Anas, but rather one of the subnarrators explaining what he thought Anas meant.
Ibn al-Salah says: "Its subnarrator related it with the above-mentioned
wording in accordance with his own understanding of it" (Muqaddima Ibn al-Salah
(b01), 99). This hadith is given as an example of a "hidden flaw" in a
number of manuals of hadith terminology such as hadith master (hafiz) Suyuti’s
Tadrib al-rawi (1.254–57); hadith master Ibn al-Salah’s Ulum
al-hadith; hadith master Zayn al-Din al-‘Iraqi’s al-Taqyid wa al-idah
(98–103); and others. Al-‘Iraqi says, "A number of hadith
masters (huffaz) have judged it to be flawed, including Shafi‘i, Daraqutni,
Bayhaqi, and Ibn ‘Abd al-Barr" (ibid., 98).
Now, Bukhari has related the
hadith up to the words "and they opened with ‘al-Hamdu li Llahi Rabbi
l-‘Alamin’"; without mentioning omitting the Basmala (Bukhari,
1.189), and Tirmidhi and Abu Dawud relate no other version. Scholars point out,
in this connection, that the words "al-Hamdu li Llahi Rabbi l-‘Alamin"
were in fact the name of the Fatiha, for the Prophet (Allah bless him and give
him peace) and his Companions often used the opening words of suras as names for
them; for example, in the hadith in Sahih al-Bukhari of Abu Sa‘id ibn al-Mu‘alla,
who relates that the Prophet (Allah bless him and give him peace) said:
"I will teach you a sura that
is the greatest sura of the Qur’an before you leave the mosque." Then
he took my hand, and when he was going out, I said to him, "Didn’t
you say, ‘I will teach you a sura that is the greatest sura of the Qur’an
before you leave the mosque’?" And he said: "‘Al-Hamdu li
Llahi Rabbi l-‘Alamin’: it is the Seven Oft-Recited [Verses] (al-Sab‘
al-Mathani) and the Tremendous Recital (al-Qur’an al-‘Adhim) that I
have been given" (ibid., 6.20–21).
In this hadith, "Al-Hamdu li
Llahi Rabbi l-‘Alamin" is plainly the name of the Fatiha, and means
nothing besides, for otherwise, it is one verse, not seven. ‘A'isha, who
was one of the ulama of the Sahaba, also referred to names of suras in this way,
as in the hadith of Bukhari that
the Prophet (Allah bless him and
give him peace), when he went to bed each night, joined his hands together, blew
a light spray of saliva upon them, and read over them "Qul huwa Llahu Ahad,"
"Qul a‘udhu bi Rabbi l-Falaq," and "Qul a‘udhu bi
Rabbi n-Nas"; then wiped every part of his body he could with them (ibid.,
233–34),
which clearly shows that she named
the suras by their opening words (after the Basmala), as did other early Muslims
(such as Bukhari in his chapter headings in the section of his Sahih on the
Virtues of the Qur’an, for example). So there is no indication, in the
portion of the Anas hadith’s wording that is agreed upon by both Bukhari
and Muslim; namely, "I prayed with the Messenger of Allah (Allah bless him
and give him peace), Abu Bakr, ‘Umar, and ‘Uthman, and they opened
with ‘al-Hamdu li Llahi Rabbi l-‘Alamin,’" that the
Basmala was not recited aloud. Says Tirmidhi: "Imam Shafi‘i has said,
‘Its meaning is that they used to begin with the Fatiha before the sura,
not that they did not recite "Bismi Llahi r-Rahmani r-Rahim."’
And Shafi‘i held that the prayer was begun with ‘Bismi Llahi r-Rahmani
r-Rahim,’ and that it was recited aloud in prayers recited aloud"
(Tirmidhi, 2.16).
Hadith scholars who are masters of
textual critique, like Daraqutni and others, consider the words of the Anas
hadith"not mentioning ‘Bismi Llahi r-Rahmani r-Rahim,’"
which outwardly seem to suggest omitting the Basmala, to be vitiated by an
‘illa or "hidden flaw" for many reasons, a few of which are:
—It is established by
numerous intersubstantiative channels of transmission (tawatur), that the
Prophet (Allah bless him and give him peace) said, "There is no prayer for
whoever does not recite the Fatiha" (Bukhari, 1.192). That the Basmala is
the Fatiha’s first verse is shown by several facts:
First, the Sahaba affirmed nothing
in the collation of the Qur’an (mushaf) of ‘Uthman’s time
except what was Qur’an, and they unanimously placed the Basmala at the
beginning of every sura except surat al-Tawba.
Second, the Prophet (Allah bless
him and give him peace) said, "When you recite ‘al-Hamdu li Llah,’
recite ‘Bismi Llahi r-Rahmani r-Rahim,’ for it is the Sum of the Qur’an
(Umm al-Qur’an), and the Compriser of the Scripture (Umm al-Kitab), and
the Seven Oft-Repeated [Verses] (al-Sab‘ al-Mathani)—and ‘Bismi
Llahi r-Rahmani r-Rahim’ is one of its verses" (Bayhaqi, 2.45; and
Daraqutni, 1.312), a hadith related with a rigorously authenticated (sahih)
channel of transmission to the Prophet (Allah bless him and give him peace), and
through another chain to Abu Hurayra alone (Allah be well pleased with him).
Third, Umm Salama relates:
"The Prophet (Allah bless him and give him peace) used to recite: ‘Bismi
Llahi r-Rahmani r-Rahim. al-Hamdu li Llahi Rabbi l-‘Alamin,’
separating each phrase"; a hadith which Hakim said was rigorously
authenticated (sahih) according to the conditions of Bukhari and Muslim, which
Imam Dhahabi corroborated (al-Mustadrak, 1.232). Daraqutni also relates from Umm
Salama that "the Prophet (Allah bless him and give him peace) when he used
to recite the Qur’an would pause in his recital verse by verse: ‘Bismi
Llahi r-Rahmani r-Rahim: al-Hamdu li Llahi Rabbi l-‘Alamin: ar-Rahmani r-Rahim:
Maliki yawmi d-din.’" Daraqutni said, "Its ascription is
rigorously authenticated (sahih); all of its narrators are reliable" (Daraqutni,
1.312–13). These hadiths show that the Basmala was recited aloud by the
Prophet (Allah bless him and give him peace) as part of the Fatiha.
Fourth, Bukhari relates in his
Sahih that when Anas was asked how the Prophet (Allah bless him and give him
peace) used to recite, "he answered: ‘By prolonging [the vowels]’—and
then he [Anas] recited ‘Bismi Llahi r-Rahmani r-Rahim,’ prolonging
the Bismi Llah, prolonging the r-Rahman, and prolonging the r-Rahim"
(Bukhari, 6.241), indicating that Anas regarded this as part of the Prophet’s
Qur’an recital and that the Prophet (Allah bless him and give him peace)
recited it aloud.
Fifth, Daraqutni has recorded two
hadiths, both from Ibn ‘Abbas, and has said about each of them, "This
is a rigorously authenticated (sahih) chain of transmission, there is not a weak
narrator in it," of which the first is: "The Prophet (Allah bless him
and give him peace) used to recite ‘Bismi Llahi r-Rahmani r-Rahim,’
aloud"; and the second is: "The Prophet (Allah bless him and give him
peace) used to begin the prayer with ‘Bismi Llahi r-Rahmani r-Rahim’"
(al-Nawawi: al-Majmu‘, 3.347).
—Imam al-Mawardi summarizes:
"Because it is established that it is obligatory to recite the Fatiha in
the prayer, and that the Basmala is part of it, the ruling for reciting the
Basmala aloud or to oneself must be the same as that of reciting the Fatiha
aloud or to oneself" (al-Hawi al-kabir, 2.139).
—Imam Nawawi says:
"Concerning reciting ‘Bismi Llahi r-Rahmani r-Rahim’ aloud, we
have mentioned that our position is that it is praiseworthy to do so. Wherever
one recites the Fatiha and sura aloud, the ruling for reciting the Basmala aloud
is the same as reciting the rest of the Fatiha and sura aloud. This is the
position of the majority of the ulama of the Sahaba and those who were taught by
them (Tabi‘in) and those after them. As for the Sahaba who held the
Basmala is recited aloud at prayer, the hadith master (hafiz) Abu Bakr al-Khatib
reports that they included Abu Bakr, ‘Umar, ‘Uthman, ‘Ali,
‘Ammar ibn Yasir, Ubayy ibn Ka‘b, Ibn ‘Umar, Ibn ‘Abbas,
Abu Qatada, Abu Sa‘id, Qays ibn Malik, Abu Hurayra, ‘Abdullah ibn
Abi Awfa, Shaddad ibn Aws, ‘Abdullah ibn Ja‘far, Husayn ibn ‘Ali,
Mu‘awiya, and the congregation of Emigrants (Muhajirin) and Helpers (Ansar)
who were present with Mu‘awiya when he prayed in Medina but did not say
the Basmala aloud, and they censured him, so he returned to saying it
aloud" (al-Majmu‘, 3.341).
These are some reasons why
scholars regard the Anas hadith in Sahih Muslim to be mu‘all or
"flawed." We cannot here discuss other aspects of the hadith such as
the flaws in its chain of narrators, which are explained in detail in Zayn
al-Din ‘Iraqi’s al-Taqyid wa al-idah (100–101), though the
foregoing may give a general idea why it has been considered flawed by hadith
masters (huffaz) such as Suyuti, ‘Iraqi, Ibn Salah, Ibn ‘Abd
al-Barr, Daraqutni, and Bayhaqi—and why the shari‘a ruling
apparently deducible from the end of the hadith; namely, omitting the Basmala
when reciting the Fatiha at prayer, has been rejected by al-Shafi‘i,
Nawawi, and others, who hold that the Basmala is recited aloud whenever the
Fatiha is. (The position of Abu Hanifa and Ahmad ibn Hanbal, it may be noted, is
that one recites the Basmala to oneself before the Fatiha, thus joining between
hadiths on both sides by interpreting the "omitting" in the Anas
hadith in other than its apparent sense, to mean merely "reciting to
oneself.") In any case, it is clearly not a story of "the hadith in
Sahih Muslim that the Imams didn’t know about," as some of the
unlearned seriously suggest today, but rather a difference of opinion in hadith
authentication involving the highest levels of shari‘a scholarship.
Studying the five conditions above
for a sahih hadith and the differences about them among specialists shows us why
the mujtahid Imams of the schools sometimes differ with one another about
whether a particular hadith is really from the Prophet (Allah bless him and give
him peace). Whoever believes that a single scholar, whether Bukhari, Muslim, or
a contemporary sheikh, can finish off all differences of opinion about the
acceptability of particular hadiths, should correct his impressions by going and
studying the sciences of hadith. What we can realize from this is that when we
find a hadith in Sahih Bukhari that one school of fiqh seems to follow and
another does not, it may well be that differences in fiqh methodology, hadith
methodology, or both, play a role.
Conclusions. Let me summarize
everything I have said tonight. I first pointed out that the knowledge you and I
learn from the Qur’an and hadith may be divided into three categories. The
first is the knowledge of Allah and His attributes, and the basic truths of
Islamic belief such as the messengerhood of the Prophet (Allah bless him and
give him peace), the belief in the Last Day, and so on. Every Muslim can and
must learn this knowledge from the Book of Allah and the sunna, which is also
the case for the second kind of knowledge: that of general Islamic laws to do
good, to avoid evil, to perform the prayer, pay zakat, fast Ramadan, to
cooperate with others in good works, and so on. Anyone can and must learn these
general prescriptions for him or herself.
Then we discussed a third category
of knowledge, which consists of fiqh or "understanding" of specific
details of Islamic practice. We found in the Qur’an and sahih hadiths that
people are of two types respecting this knowledge, those qualified to do ijtihad
and those who are not. We mentioned the sahih hadith about "a man who
judges for people while ignorant: he shall go to hell," showing that
would-be mujtahids are criminals when they operate without training.
We heard the Qur’anic verse
that established that a certain group of the Muslim community must learn and be
able to teach others the specific details of their religion. We heard the Qur’anic
verse that those who do not know must ask those who do, as well as the verse
about referring matters to "those whose task it is to find it out."
We talked about these scholars,
the mujtahid Imams, firstly, in terms of their comprehensive knowledge of the
whole Qur’an and hadith textual corpus, and secondly, in terms of their
depth of interpretation, and here we mentioned Qur’an and hadith examples
that illustrate the processes by which mujtahid Imams join between multiple
texts, and give precedence when there is ostensive conflict. Our concrete
examples of ijtihad enabled us in turn to understand to whom the Imams addressed
their famous remarks not to follow their positions without knowing the proofs.
They addressed them to the first rank scholars they had trained and who were
capable of grasping and evaluating the issues involved in these particular
proofs.
We then saw that the Imams were
also mujtahids in the matter of judging hadiths to be sahih or otherwise, and
noted that, just as it is unlawful for a mujtahid Imam to do taqlid or
"follow another mujtahid without knowing his evidence" in a question
of fiqh, neither does he do so in the question of accepting particular hadiths.
Finally, we noted that the differences in reliability ratings of hadiths among
qualified scholars were parallel to the differences among scholars about the
details of Islamic practice: a relatively small amount of difference in relation
to the whole.
The main point of all of this is
that while every Muslim can take the foundation of his Islam directly from the
Qur’an and hadith; namely, the main beliefs and general ethical principles
he has to follow—for the specific details of fiqh of Islamic practice,
knowing a Qur’anic verse or hadith may be worlds apart from knowing the
shari‘a ruling, unless one is a qualified mujtahid or is citing one.
As for would-be mujtahids who know
some Arabic and are armed with books of hadith, they are like the would-be
doctor we mentioned earlier: if his only qualification were that he could read
English and owned some medical books, we would certainly object to his
practicing medicine, even if it were no more than operating on someone’s
little finger. So what should be said of someone who knows only Arabic and has
some books of hadith, and wants to operate on your akhira?
To understand why Muslims follow
madhhabs, we have to go beyond simplistic slogans about "the
divinely-protected versus the non-divinely-protected," and appreciate the
Imams of fiqh who have operationalized the Qur’an and sunna to apply in
our lives as shari‘a, and we must ask ourselves if we really "hear
and obey" when Allah tells us
"Ask those who know if you
know not" (Qur’an 16:43).
© Nuh Ha Mim Keller, 1995
Read more articles by Nuh Ha Mim
Keller here.
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